The Commercial Appeal

What the $65 billion broadband plan will do

White House invests in greater internet access

- Tali Arbel

The Senate’s $1 trillion bipartisan infrastruc­ture plan includes a $65 billion investment in broadband that the White House says will “deliver reliable, affordable, high-speed internet to every household.”

It may not actually achieve that, but it’s a major step in that direction. The broadband funding is a “great down payment” on the Biden administra­tion’s far-reaching goals of connecting all Americans and making internet more affordable, said Matt Wood, a broadband policy expert at the consumer advocacy group Free Press. Critically important is $14 billion aimed at helping low-income Americans pay for service.

The “digital divide” – the persistent U.S. gap between the broadband haves and have-nots – became glaringly obvious during the pandemic as school, work and health care shifted online. Tens of millions either don’t have internet access or, if they do have access to a local phone or cable company, can’t afford to pay for it.

More radical industry changes laid out in the Biden administra­tion’s original $100 billion plan, like promoting alternativ­es to the dominant phone and cable industries and hinting at price regulation, didn’t survive bipartisan negotiatio­ns over a bill that had to attract Republican support. Among the bill’s big winners, in fact, are those same internet service providers.

The Senate passed the $1 trillion infrastruc­ture bill Tuesday, 69-30, with support from both Democrats and Republican­s.

The House is expected to consider it in September.

The digital divide

The Federal Communicat­ions Commission says about 14 million Americans don’t have access to broadband at the speeds necessary to work and study online – 25 megabits per second downloads and 3 mbps uploads – but acknowledg­es that its maps are faulty. Outside groups have made higher estimates.

Phone and cable companies don’t have incentives to build internet infrastruc­ture in rural areas, where customers are sparser and they may not make their money back. That’s traditiona­lly where government subsidies to the industry have come into play: About $47 billion to rural internet from 2009 through 2017, and an additional $20 billion for rural broadband over the next decade and another $9 billion for highspeed wireless internet called 5G in sparsely populated regions.

But there are also tens of millions of people today who have access to the internet and just don’t sign up, most often because they can’t afford it, in both cities and remote areas. The National Urban League estimates that number at 30 million households.

Focusing on affordabil­ity

The Senate bill would provide about $14 billion toward a $30 monthly benefit that helps low-income people pay for internet, extending a pandemic-era emergency program.

“What makes this historic is the focus on affordability,” said Jenna Levent-off of Public Knowledge, which advocates for more funding for broadband. The bill, should it become law, is “going to help a lot of people that were otherwise unable to connect.”

An existing program, known as Lifeline, aimed to help solve this affordability issue before. But it only provides $9.25 a month, which doesn’t go far for internet plans. It has also been a target of Republican­s, who say it has fraud and abuse problems.

Industry groups have also advocated for a permanent broadband benefit. Broadband companies, if they choose to participat­e, will gain additional customers. The program is “a plus for all ISPS,” said Evercore ISI analyst Vijay Jayant.

The legislatio­n directs the FCC to create rules intended to protect consumers from companies that could push them to sign up for more expensive services in connection with the benefit and against other “unjust and unreasonab­le” practices.

Money for networks

The bill provides about $42 billion in grants to states, who in turn will funnel it to ISPS to expand networks where people don’t have good internet service. Companies that take this money will have to offer a low-cost service option. Government regulators will approve the price of that service.

The bill requires that internet projects come with minimum speeds of 100 mbps down/20 up, a big step up from current requiremen­ts.

Cable companies are also happy that the funding is primarily dedicated to areas that don’t currently have broadband service. Some advocates had hoped the government would step in and fund competitio­n to cable so that people had more choices.

 ?? JESSICA HILL/AP ?? The “digital divide” – the gap between the broadband haves and have-nots – became obvious during the pandemic as school, work and health care shifted online.
JESSICA HILL/AP The “digital divide” – the gap between the broadband haves and have-nots – became obvious during the pandemic as school, work and health care shifted online.

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